enJOY it

an archived personal and craft blog from Elise Blaha Cripe.

Email

Email is my favorite and the bane of my existence. For better or worse though, it's the Internet lifeline and I am committed to staying on top of it. I love nothing more than a cleared inbox. (Truly, it's a favorite thing which I know is just sad.)

Here are the things I do to tackle email.

I treat my inbox like a to-do list. I don't keep emails in my inbox
once they are dealt with. Gmail has an "archive" button that keeps the
emails for you, but it doesn't keep them staring at you every day. This
is just personal preference, but for me, the more white space, the less
overwhelming my inbox seems. (Sometimes I catch a glimpse at Paul's
packed inbox – he deals with and labels email but doesn't archive
anything – and feel my heart rate increase drastically.) If I have something in my inbox, it needs to be dealt with. If it's not there, it's off my plate (or written down somewhere else).

I recommend other contact methods. Half the battle is
just keeping the emails from coming in. On my sidebar, where my contact
info is, I recommend folks check out my FAQ page
(which I try hard to keep up to date). Why? Because 97% of the
questions I am asked via email I have already answered before. I also
recommend people get in touch on twitter because I love that the character limit forces a quick and direct Q&A session.
If you deal with a lot of blogging related email, I also recommend
having an easy to use search function on the sidebar. It can be
invaluable for readers, but also for YOU to find posts that answer
questions.

I practice the one-touch rule. I have talked about this
many times, but I do my best to open an email and deal with it
immediately. If I can answer the question right away, I answer the
question RIGHT AWAY. If I can act on the email, I act. No delay. No
time to stress. No time to sigh about how much email I have to tackle.
In the door and in then in the archives with just one click. Exception to this is orders – I wait until I have a few to print shipping labels for and pack up together.

I deal with 90% of my
email at my desk.
(The other 10% are the e-blasts from stores that I
trash or quick emails I can respond to from my phone.) The
rest get handled sitting at my laptop with Pandora on and my calendar at
the ready. When I have an email with deadlines or other "to-dos," I jot
them down on my calendar and immediately file the email away. I can
then clear that email from my inbox and move forward with whatever else
is in there. Plus, sitting at my desk guarantees I am in "work-mode" and
I can type much quicker on a normal keyboard so it's a time saver.

I use labels (or folders) to store emails. I have
labels for many different types of emails. A few current examples :
stamp shop sale, PDF purchase, wholesale, back order, assignments, queen
bee market, travel, addresses. And on and on and on. I probably about
40 labels at the moment which allow me to quickly sort through email and
get them out of my inbox but make them easy to recall when I need
something. The trick for me here is to not get over-zealous with the sorting.
I could get really detailed, but choose not to because after awhile, I
think the focus can become about organizing how you deal with the email
instead of just dealing with email. I never spend more time organizing than I spend responding. 🙂

I receive Typepad comments in my email & respond right from there. It's
very important to me that I read every single comment and respond to
each question that comes through this blog. I have Typepad email each
comment into my inbox and I read them there. I currently have "Typepad
Connect" set up which means I can respond to the comment by replying to
the email. (If you are a Typepad user, you can do this too under
Settings >
Comments. Select "Enable Typepad Connect" at the bottom of the screen.)
It's so simple and means I only have to "check" and respond in one
place.

I keep it short and sweet. I cannot stress enough that I am grateful for every email I get. I read every word of every personal one and I respond always (unless it's a generic PR pitch or unless the email is rude). But while I cannot always match each email for depth and breath, I can be heartfelt in my response. I think people think that a long email deserves a long response (which means they wait until they have a lot of time to respond and then never have time so three weeks go by) and I don't think that's always the case. I subscribe to the theory that every email deserves a read and a thoughtful response, but it doesn't need to be a novel.

And those are my simple tips. 😉 Happy emailing.

Posted in

42 responses to “simple tips for dealing with email.”

  1. susan Avatar

    another great post Elise – i didn’t know about the archive option in gmail – I’m off to check it out now – thanks

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  2. Jody R. Avatar

    I have been going through my emails and unsubscribing from pretty much every list I was on. With three email addys (personal, school & work), spam can really add up. It’s so nice to only have a few emails coming in every day. I also use folders. I have a tax folder and a purchases folder for receipts. When it’s time to do taxes, I can print off those emails if they add up to the magic number. If not, they get deleted.

    Like

  3. Pink Ronnie Avatar

    I am totally with you about having an empty inbox. I get stressed looking at my husband’s sometimes as well! Inbox zero is the goal, and makes life so much less stressful! I have three little boys at home, so I try to assign their naptime as the time when I deal with emails, and that’s worked pretty well so far.
    Ronnie xo

    Like

  4. Skye Avatar

    Thank you so much for these tips! I am one of those people who marks emails as unread to go back to later if I don’t have time right then. I consider it one of my worst procrastination habits! You would probably panic if you saw my inbox, haha. The funny thing is, with my company email, I’m pretty good and I only keep things I’m still working on in my inbox. I’m thinking I need to add a few more labels to help me organize my personal email better.

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  5. Krystyn Avatar

    You and I are very similar in our “email habits”…white space=good. 🙂 Happy Thursday to you!

    Like

  6. eeny Avatar

    these are some great tips. thanks elise.
    i should totally adopt the one-touch rule to my email routine. you are so right about the length of an e-mail. i rather get a short, thoughtful but quick answer than wait for ages or even be forgotten.

    Like

  7. Jenny Lynch Avatar
    Jenny Lynch

    Hi Elise!
    This comment really has nothing to do with email other than I wish I was this organized! I recently joined the project life bandwagon and am so excited to get started..even my mother joined too! Plan to order 3 more kits too..of course seafoam ;), olive and neutral baby edition when they are available. My question is about instagram. I am really behind the times and don’t realy know what this is but would like to include instagram photos in my pl. could you talk about instagram a little? What it is, how to use it and how to print photos etc? Can it be used to print photos from a feature phone and Facebook? Thanks so much! As always…just love your blog 🙂
    Jenny

    Like

  8. rachel swartley Avatar

    I always treat my inbox like a to-do list, and I genuinely don’t understand why some people leave ALL emails in their inbox. How do they know which ones still need attention/action/responses?!

    Like

  9. Julia Avatar

    yay! i was hoping to see this post on the blog after seeing your instagram pic:) your heart rate would be through the roof if you saw my work or personal email! out.of.control. i definitely need to develop some type of system for my inbox… thanks for sharing yours!

    Like

  10. Dani Avatar
    Dani

    Love all your tips! Do you get a lot of the eblasts/junk mail? My inbox seems to be filled constantly with coupons, newsletters, social media updates, etc. Do you opt out of those types of emails, or just delete them?

    Like

  11. alexandra Avatar

    Thanks for this one… lots of great, motivating tips.
    I already went into my typepad account and switched to
    “enable Typepad connect”.
    Thanks so much!!

    Like

  12. Michelle Avatar

    I was so jealous when I saw your picture of ‘no new mail’ because I’ve been battling my work email for a while now. It’s partly out of my control due to our busy season but your tips are really helpful. Thank you for sharing them! MAYBE by the time I leave tomorrow I can have it down to 10 🙂

    Like

  13. iHanna Avatar

    Great ideas for dealing with mail. I looove that wordpress has a function where I can answer a comment in the comment section of the blog and it gets saved there AND sends an email to the commenter. In this way it shows that I’m answering and what I say too.

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  14. elise blaha Avatar

    hey Jenny, thanks so much! I probably will not do a full post, (but Stephanie did a great one : http://www.stephaniehowell.com/my_weblog/2012/08/instagram.html) I email or upload the photos to my computer and print at home for PL, but I know persnickityprints.com has an app for printing square photos right from you phone. 🙂 Hope that helps a bit.

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  15. elise blaha Avatar

    I do get a lot. But I have turned off all social media updates. Every once in awhile I will go through and unsubscribe from e-blasts, but they all seem to creep back up. I delete most without opening. gmail saves my trash for 25 days, so if a few days later I realize I really want the sale code, I just search for the email and can find it in the trash. 🙂

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  16. Carrie Rosalind Avatar

    This post inspired me to go clean out my inbox, so thanks for that! 🙂

    Like

  17. veronica Avatar

    fun fact! the oldest email in my inbox is from january 17, 2009. it’s a reminder to send a complaint about a terrible customer service experience. almost four years later, and i still haven’t complained but just can’t bring myself to archive.
    (and that concludes storytime. have a nice day, friend.)

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  18. elise blaha Avatar

    made me smile. xo.

    Like

  19. Nat Avatar

    Do you use gmail filters? I use those to cut down on the amount of time I spend labeling. If I have a particular type of email that always gets labeled a certain way, I usually set up a filter so it arrives in my inbox with a label (like any email with “Project X” in the subject line that comes from person Y, who I know leads Project X, gets labeled automatically with the Project X label).

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  20. elise blaha Avatar

    that is awesome! I do not, but it is something I will look into. Great tip!

    Like

  21. Jenny Lynch Avatar
    Jenny Lynch

    Thanks Elise! I will check out the link and your help is appreciated :).

    Like

  22. libbywilko Avatar
    libbywilko

    Thanks for the tips, I use Outlook express very old school which sorts my email into my folders but I think I’ve over defined and now have too many categories lol and miss things in my email.

    Like

  23. Ann-Marie Avatar

    When I think of you, I think “that girl has got her shit TOGETHER! 🙂

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  24. Jenny Meyerson Avatar

    Best response. Couldn’t have worded that better Ann-Marie. Ditto.

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  25. elise blaha Avatar

    haha – I take that as a huge compliment. Thanks, ladies!! 🙂

    Like

  26. Amanda S Avatar
    Amanda S

    One empty inbox. Thanks for the motivation to go through and sort and delete. I feel calmer.

    Like

  27. Brianna Avatar
    Brianna

    My favorite inbox is an empty inbox. 99% of my e-mails are blog posts. I tend to do a mass delete every week or so simply because I’m overwhelmed by it all. I suppose it might be different if I got more personal e-mail.

    Like

  28. Kelsey Avatar

    Elise! I have been staring at an over-full inbox forever. This morning I sat down and archived/deleted/filed my whole inbox! Thank you for the motivation to give myself this gift. Hoorah!

    Like

  29. Kristen Paul Avatar
    Kristen Paul

    Great tips! I’m in dire need of de-cluttering and organizing my mailbox. Thanks for sharing!

    Like

  30. J3SS1C4 Avatar

    Thanks for the great tips! I have a similar approach to my email too… I prefer to only touch it once, but lately I’ve notice I only read my email on my phone and when I logged on to the computer, I had over 100! Because I read them on the phone though, it’s usually pretty quick to go through them afterwards though.

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  31. Lisa Avatar

    I don’t often comment but I do seriously love your blog. You keep it simple, personal yet professional and keep it interesting. Plus I love all your crafting endeavours. Some very good tips on e-mailing. I may just need to try a few 😀

    Like

  32. Julie @SavvyEats Avatar

    I’m the same way — I need emails to be OUT OUT OUT of my inbox(es) (I use GMails Multiple Inboxes feature to stay organized). While my husband also uses Multiple Inboxes, he NEVER archives anything and I don’t know how it doesn’t drive him insane!

    Like

  33. Julie @SavvyEats Avatar

    Yes! I 100% recommend using filters for easy sorting!

    Like

  34. Emily Avatar
    Emily

    elyse,
    i don’t want to add to your response obligations, yet i wanted to add my two cents just because i admire what you do and who you are so much. (response NOT necessary.) suffice it to say, though i sense we’re of different backgrounds and political persuasions, i always understand and respect where you’re coming from. more importantly, your spirit is so generous and kind, and your approach to life–always finding ways to improve, enjoy, comfort, and love–syncs exactly with my own values and goals. i’m so glad you’re putting your voice and life out there for the rest of us to link up with and take inspiration from.
    cheers,
    emily

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  35. elise blaha Avatar

    You are so sweet. Thank you!

    Like

  36. Jess Lonett Avatar

    i am looking forward to attempting this life changing method of using email. it’s my goal to have my inbox at zero by thanksgiving. i don’t want you to know what my current number is, but it is not pretty 😉

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  37. -Michelle Avatar

    Well I tried this. Archived everything. All 359 read emails in my inbox. And then I felt sad sad sad. Where is all my emails!!?!?! Doesn’t anyone love me?!?!?!
    Now I’m letting the read ones that I want to keep stay in there again. But there’s only about 20 since I delete a lot.
    Sad. I am sad. No emails. :-(((

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  38. elise blaha Avatar

    hmmm, that is the opposite of me! Bummer that it made you sad! Obviously not the point.

    Like

  39. Lorna Avatar

    Hey Elise,
    I’ve emailed you and you emailed me back with an awesome response in super speedy time. As a long time reader it felt like being contacted by a celebrity (because to blog readers you kind of are!) and I really appreciated it.
    I just wanted to let you know that from a receiver of an Elise email that you’re doing a great job!

    Like

  40. elise blaha Avatar

    Thank you so much!!

    Like

  41. Esa Lipponen Avatar

    Those are very good tips on dealing with your email they are really organize well.Many of people now a really into email.In Finland country many people are still use to find their match through online which sometimes they are getting too many email from their chat mate which is always amazing happen specially to girls.

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  42. Kate Avatar

    Just to let you know this is appearing in my link round up on Saturday 1/12 at CrazyLovelyMe.com! I love it – it’s inspiring me to go tackle the monster my inbox has become!

    Like

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